From
this it appears clear that the teeth and face changed first in order
to provide an advantage. Is it possible that the mouth was used to
grasp bone or something else quite hard and then apply the leverage
of the neck to breaking it open?
It
also appears that the genetic origins of certain human traits can be
traced right back the neanderthals specifically and by that I mean
the uncommon occurrence of the broad shoulder short stocky type. It
appears to be a recessive as is red hair also noted as belonging to
the same suite.
Otherwise
it shows us how different traits can be easily folded into a general
genome.
Ancient Skulls Reveal 'Mixed' Neanderthal-Like
Lineage
By Charles Q. Choi, Live Science Contributor, June 19, 2014
A key first step in Neanderthal evolution may
have been the development of front teeth that could act like a "third
hand," researchers now say.
These new findings are based on 17 hominin skulls
showing a mix of traits from Neanderthals and more
primitive human lineages, dating back some 430,000 years. The
specimens likely belonged to a hominin group within the Neanderthal
lineage but perhaps not direct Neanderthal ancestors. (Hominins
include modern humans and extinct ancestors and close relatives of
the human lineage.)
The mix of traits suggests the defining features
of the Neanderthal body may have evolved separately in stages instead
of evolving together gradually, scientists added.
These findings also reveal that, evolutionarily
speaking, "Neanderthals have very deep roots, as deep as 430,000
years," lead study author Juan-Luis Arsuaga, a
paleontologist at and director of the Joint Center for Evolution and
Human Behavior in Madrid, told Live Science. "Modern
humans, on the contrary, have roots only 200,000 years deep.
It seems that modern humans evolved later." [See Photos of the
Hominin Fossils and Spanish Cave Site]
Stocky Neanderthals
Modern humans, Homo sapiens, are the only
living members of the human lineage, Homo. Scientists think that
lineage arose in Africa about 2 million years ago,
relatively soon after the beginning of the ice age, also known as the
Pleistocene Epoch. The closest-known extinct relatives of
modern humans were the Neanderthals, who lived in Europe and Asia
until they disappeared about 40,000 years ago.
About 400,000 to 500,000 years ago, in the heart
of the Pleistocene, archaic humans split off from other groups living
during that period in Africa and East Asia; these archaic humans
settled in Eurasia, where they evolved characteristics that would
come to define the Neanderthal lineage. Later, between about 100,000
to 200,000 years ago, modern humans evolved in Africa.
Neanderthals were generally shorter and
stockier than modern humans, built like weightlifters or wrestlers.
Neanderthal skulls also famously had large brows and jaws, as well as
big noses and sloping foreheads and chins. They also
usually had larger brains than modern humans, with long, flat
brainpans.
Still, Neanderthals remained closely related
enough with modern humans for the two to interbreed — in fact,
about 1.5 to 2.1 percent of the DNA of any modern human outside
Africa is Neanderthal in origin. Recent findings revealed that
Neanderthals interbred with ancestors of modern humans when
modern humans began spreading out of Africa perhaps about 40,000 to
80,000 years ago. However, some research suggests the
migration began earlier.
How to make a Neanderthal
It has remained uncertain why the physical
form of Neanderthals diverged so much from that of other human groups
over a relatively short amount of time.
"For decades, the nature of the evolutionary
process that gave rise to Neanderthals has been discussed,"
study co-author Ignacio Martinez at the University of Alcalá in
Spain said in a statement. "An important question in these
debates was whether the 'Neanderthalization process' involved all
regions of the skull from the beginning, or if, on the contrary,
there were various stages in this process that affected different
parts of the skull at different times."
To help solve the mystery of how Neanderthals
evolved, scientists analyzed fossils unearthed from the Sima de los
Huesosor "Pit of Bones," an underground cave in the
Atapuerca Mountains in northern Spain. The pit lies about 100
feet (30 meters) below the surface, at the bottom of a 42-foot (13 m)
vertical shaft. Researchers suggest the bones there may have been
washed into the cave by rain or floods, or possibly even
intentionally buried there. [See Photos of Other Fossils Found in
Sima de los Huesos Cave]
Researchers first discovered human fossils in the
cave in 1976, and have continuously excavated at the site since 1984.
"After 30 years, we have recovered nearly 7,000 human fossils
corresponding to all skeletal regions of at least 28 individuals,"
Martinez said in a statement. "This extraordinary collection
includes 17 fragmentary skulls, many of which are very complete."
The Sima fossils could provide a key snapshot of
what the skulls of archaic humans in Europe were like during the
early stages of the Neanderthal lineage.
"The finding of 17 generally very complete
skulls is in itself one of the greatest discoveries in
paleoanthropology ever," Arsuaga said.
Skulls with mixed traits
These ancient skulls displayed a mix of
Neanderthal and more primitive traits. This "mosaic
pattern" of traits seen in the Sima fossils suggests
Neanderthals evolved their defining features in stages at different
times, not with gradual, steady changes happening together over the
entire skull
Specifically, the Sima fossils
possessed Neanderthal teeth, jaw and facial features. In
contrast, the nearby braincase still displayed features associated
with more-primitive ancient humans. This work suggests
facial changes were the first step in Neanderthal evolution.
Critically, many of the Neanderthal-like
features in the Sima fossils were related to chewing. "It seems
these modifications had to do with an intensive use of the frontal
teeth," Arsuaga said in a statement. "The
incisors show a great wear, as if they had been used as a
'third hand,' typical of Neanderthals."
All in all, the physical features of the Sima
fossils suggest these hominins were part of the Neanderthal lineage,
"although not necessarily direct ancestors to the classic
Neanderthals," Arsuaga said in a statement. Indeed, other
ancient humans in Europe from the Middle Pleistocene do not exhibit
the suite of Neanderthal-like features seen in the Sima fossils,
suggesting more than one evolutionary lineage appears to have
coexisted on that continent at the time.
Extreme variations in climate during the
Pleistocene may explain why the physical form of the Neanderthal
lineage diverged so quickly from that of other human groups. Those
environmental changes led to glaciers and other barriers that
separated human groups from each other, and this isolation may have
driven the groups to genetically diverge, the scientists noted.
The scientists detailed their findings in the
June 20 issue of the journal Science.
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